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Deadly illness that kills 110,000 a year rapidly becoming resistant to antibiotics in terrifying mutation

Deadly illness that kills 110,000 a year rapidly becoming resistant to antibiotics in terrifying mutation

Daily Mail​2 days ago
An ancient killer has become all the more dangerous with time, mutating often to better sidestep medications.
The bacterium that causes typhoid fever, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S Typhi), has evolved to resist common antibiotics.
In 2022, a group of researchers from around the world identified more than 4,000 strains obtained from blood samples from over 70 countries as extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Typhi.
Drug-resistant strains have spread from country to country around 200 times since 1990. People infected with resistant typhoid carry it to new countries, while the global food trade spreads resistant bacteria to dense cities with poor sanitation accelerates the spread.
Researchers warned that the most commonly used antibiotics, including Ampicillin, Chloramphenicol, and Azithromycin, may not save patients' lives like they used to.
Approximately 5,700 Americans become ill each year, and 620 are hospitalized. Deaths from typhoid fever in the US are very infrequent.
Dr Jason Andrews, a specialist in infectious diseases at Stanford University and lead author of the report, said the breakneck pace at which S. Typhi is spreading 'is a real cause for concern.'
Typhoid fever sickens 11million people every year, causing fever, abdominal pain, and, if left untreated, intestinal bleeding and sepsis. It kills about 100,000 people annually.
Around one in five people who are not treated for typhoid will die.
When the genes of a strain of bacteria mutate to resist antibiotics, doctors have far fewer treatment options when patients present with typhoid symptoms.
Researchers analyzed the genetics of over 7,600 samples of S. Typhi, including 3,489 samples from individuals with typhoid in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan from 2014 to 2019.
They also looked at 4,169 older samples from more than 70 countries, some dating back to 1905.
They pored over the bacteria's genetic blueprint to identify genes that can change the bacterial protein that antibiotics usually attack.
This causes the bacteria to make enzymes that break down the drug, eject antibiotics before they work, or use alternative biochemical pathways.
The team warned that typhoid-causing bacteria are mutating so rapidly that modern medicine can't keep up, stating that by the time scientists decide to use vaccines based on today's resistance data, it may already be too late.
South Asia is a hotspot where resistance continues to develop and then spreads globally.
Since 1990, strains resistant to the antibiotic class quinolones have evolved independently at least 94 times, with 97 percent of these cases originating in South Asia, specifically in countries such as India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal.
What began as localized resistance, affecting 85 percent of Bangladeshi typhoid cases by the early 2000s, exploded across the region, surpassing a 95 percent prevalence in India, Pakistan, and Nepal within a decade.
The pattern repeats with newer drugs. Azithromycin resistance has emerged seven times since 2003, with Bangladeshi strains steadily proliferating since 2013, while resistance to last-line antibiotics cephalosporins now looms as the next frontier in the escalating crisis.
While these strains most often occur within South Asia and spread from there to Southeast Asia, East Africa, and Southern Africa, they have also been reported in the US, UK and Canada.
Dr Andrew said: 'The fact resistant strains of S. Typhi have spread internationally so many times also underscores the need to view typhoid control, and antibiotic resistance more generally, as a global rather than local problem.'
The research was published in The Lancet Microbe journal.
Typhoid is rare in the US, and cases typically arise after a person has traveled internationally.
It primarily affects people in areas with poor sanitation, and children under five are more susceptible.
In 2018, a Massachusetts daycare center temporarily closed after a child was diagnosed with typhoid, likely contracted during recent international travel.
Typhoid fever spreads through fecal-oral transmission, meaning people ingest the bacteria Salmonella Typhi from food, water, or surfaces that have come in contact with fecal matter, such as eating food handled by someone with typhoid who didn't wash their hands after using the bathroom.
The study has some gaps that need to be considered.
Researchers lacked sufficient genetic data from key regions, particularly parts of Africa and Oceania, where typhoid is prevalent. Without more samples from these areas, it is more difficult to track how and when resistant strains spread.
Even in countries with better monitoring, most samples are collected from just a few locations, which may not accurately reflect what is happening elsewhere.
And since only a small fraction of typhoid cases get genetically tested, the true scale of antibiotic resistance and global spread is probably even worse than the numbers show.
Researchers said THIS highlights the need 'to expand genomic surveillance to provide a more comprehensive window into the emergence, expansion, and spread of antibiotic-resistant organisms.'
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Do you fall in love hard and fast? Three signs you're an emophiliac – & five ways to break the destructive lust cycle
Do you fall in love hard and fast? Three signs you're an emophiliac – & five ways to break the destructive lust cycle

The Sun

time17 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Do you fall in love hard and fast? Three signs you're an emophiliac – & five ways to break the destructive lust cycle

FROM falling hard and fast to ignoring red flags, why emophilia could be your toxic dating trait. Have you ever been on a first date and felt like you've met your soulmate? 1 If this happens often, you may have emophilia, AKA a tendency to fall in love quickly and with just about anyone. And experts warn it can have a negative impact on mental health, leaving people vulnerable and trapped in toxic relationships, or see them darting from one relationship to the next, constantly chasing the thrill of early attraction or that feeling of falling in love. 'When you first fall for someone, you get that rush of the feel-good hormone, serotonin,' says Sarah Louise Ryan, dating and relationship expert, matchmaker and psychotherapist. 'This phase of romantic love is really the rose-tinted glasses phase. You are falling for the newness of these just-discovered feelings, just as much as you're falling for the actual person. This is because new and different people bring out different parts of us.' There's nothing wrong with these emotions, though they do simmer down as we build a relationship. 'In reality, when that spark fades, that is when the real relationship begins,' says Sarah. 'But those with emophilia don't ever want that feeling to fizzle out, which can lead them into a volatile position romantically. They either never fully commit and move on to the next partner, or they date multiple people to discover who they have the biggest spark with, all in search of the rush.' The emotional fallout from this pattern can be huge. The good news is it's possible to stop and change your thinking and actions. I'm a dating expert - the 5 key signs your partner is cheating on you & the Instagram feature that'll tell you all you need to know Love At First Sight? But whatever happened to 'love at first sight', you might wonder? 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Discover the qualities you like in yourself and note the ways in which you are capable without having a significant other. Then, pick up conscious dating when the time is right. 'When you find the confidence to make the right choices, you will no longer let your drive for a feeling choose for you,' says Sarah. 'It will be hard work, but worth it.' 2. Spot The Red Flags Some red flags are universal. For example, a lack of respect or signs of attempting to control another person. However, others will be more specific to you. For example, how do you feel about their financial situation, living arrangements, family set-up or beliefs? It's easy for a friend to say: 'That's a red flag', but ask yourself if it really is for you. Write down your deal-breakers, then ensure when connecting with someone that you ask the questions that will unveil these warning signs. 3. Note What Hasn't Worked Sit back and really think about the patterns you have fallen into with each romantic partner. 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'That means that those with emophilia can consciously connect with themselves and with others when dating.'

Travis Kelce goes for solemn drive in LA while Taylor Swift helps her dad recover from shock heart surgery
Travis Kelce goes for solemn drive in LA while Taylor Swift helps her dad recover from shock heart surgery

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Travis Kelce goes for solemn drive in LA while Taylor Swift helps her dad recover from shock heart surgery

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Wife of man who died in horrific MRI machine incident reveals sickening details of how he died... and makes shock accusation
Wife of man who died in horrific MRI machine incident reveals sickening details of how he died... and makes shock accusation

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Wife of man who died in horrific MRI machine incident reveals sickening details of how he died... and makes shock accusation

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